High-heeled shoes and evolution theory.

In summary, women wear high-heeled shoes, such as pumps, to attract taller males. This is due to enormous selection pressure for height in our species, and women wanting a mate as tall or taller than their father. However, it is observed that tall women are more likely to wear high heels, and the reason for this is unclear. Some speculate that it is to make their leg muscles look better, while others suggest it is a societal pressure from fashion magazines. There are also theories that high heels make women appear more helpless and frail, which is considered attractive to men. The evolutionary reason for this behavior is still unknown, but it is clear that high heels serve a purpose in attracting the opposite sex.
  • #36
Jimmy Snyder said:
Some masculinists argue that the neckties were designed to make men helpless and vulnerable, perpetuating the gender role of females as liberators of the slowly suffocating men. Neckties have also been blamed for reducing the men to a sex object by sacrificing practical comfort in favor of an alleged increase in sex appeal.


:smile:
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #37
I should point out that since I retired, I don't wear neckties as often as I used to. After I gave them all to charity, the local bums look much better and have better luck with the females than ever before. I still haven't reached the point where I'm ready to burn my underwear yet, but my wife says that if I don't change them more often, she's going to do it for me.
 
  • #38
Jimmy Snyder said:
The necktie has been a central battleground of sexual politics ever since the emergence of the men's liberation movement of the 1970s BC. Many second-wave masculinists rejected what they regarded as constricting standards of male beauty, created for the subordination and objectifying of men and self-perpetuated by reproductive competition and men's own aesthetics. Some masculinists argue that the neckties were designed to make men helpless and vulnerable, perpetuating the gender role of females as liberators of the slowly suffocating men. Neckties have also been blamed for reducing the men to a sex object by sacrificing practical comfort in favor of an alleged increase in sex appeal.
(bolding mine)

I think it's worse than that.

Neckties were invented by women that hated men enough to take pleasure in seeing them strangled and mutilated by the office paper shredder.

Tie clips, on the other hand, were invented by women that felt some sense of protection over the menfolk in her life.

Especially really cool tie clips like these:
http://www.collectorsquest.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/slideruleclips.jpg [Broken]
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #39
Ryan_m_b said:
Rule 1 of applying the theory of evolution to cultural practices: be extremely careful and hesitant when applying the theory of evolution to cultural practices because 99.99% of the time your ad hoc rationalisation will not only be wrong, it will completely miss the point.

This is especially true when you are trying to discuss items of fashion that are transient and culture specific.

So you're claiming that multiple body piercings serve no evolutionary purpose? Surely it at least protects them from increased exposure to cosmic rays since they can never get past the metal detectors in order to board a plane.
 
  • #40
BobG said:
Especially really cool tie clips like these:
http://www.collectorsquest.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/slideruleclips.jpg [Broken]

Those look like tie clips invented by masculinists. :tongue:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #41
Speaking of high-heeled -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRe42BDK_R4
 
  • #42
I like Serena said:
I believe more in zooby's view: they want to look pretty, they want to be appreciated... for the power it brings them.
That's not exactly what I was trying to say (although the average Dominitrix costume does seem to include spiked high heels). I was trying to say that the desire to dress up and be attractive is, itself, attractive, even if the woman is not so skilled in operating her high heels. Some women do seem awkward in them, but it's the thought that counts.
 
  • #43
FlexGunship said:
My personal opinion regarding a girl wearing high heels is about the same as a man who wears expensive but tasteful clothing. It's nothing to do with the specifics of the clothing and way more about the fact that this is what our current culture deems as "put together." It's a social differentiator; its ends are its own means; it's a confidence booster in its own right.

I agree. If you want to appear put together, you have to wear what society decides how put together people should look like. It's a universal language that the majority of people (society) understand.
 
  • #44
zoobyshoe said:
That's not exactly what I was trying to say (although the average Dominitrix costume does seem to include spiked high heels).
:rofl:
 
  • #45
As the feminist movement gained momentum, however, stilettos went out of favor with the cry: “Liberate the captive foot of womanhood!” For many feminists, high heels indicated subservience and sexual stereotyping by men. High heels were titillating “man-made” objects, literally involved in crippling women, or at least slowing them down when the need to run away from male violence and oppressors arose. Heels were seen as a comparable successor to foot binding and the tight-laced corset as perverse regulatory objects for molding the feminine. Consequently, heels dropped and thickened, and soon low-heeled shoes with square toes replaced the stiletto (Gamman 1993).

Perhaps influenced in part by successful TV and film hits as Sex in the City and The Devil Wears Prada, some women are even going under the knife to shorten their toes or inject padding into the balls of their feet to allow their feet to fit more comfortably into a pair of stilettos
Sick. I worked with a woman that broke her foot trying to wear ridiculous high heels. It's not possibe to squeeze your toes into that tiny space at such a severe angle. She was very skinny too, so it wasn't her weight.

http://www.randomhistory.com/1-50/036heels.html
 
  • #46
Evo said:
Sick. I worked with a woman that broke her foot trying to wear ridiculous high heels. It's not possibe to squeeze your toes into that tiny space at such a severe angle. She was very skinny too, so it wasn't her weight.

http://www.randomhistory.com/1-50/036heels.html
Let's try a different, perhaps less selective, quote from that peer-reviewed article ...

Formal Invention of High Heels as Fashion

The formal invention of high heels as fashion is typically attributed to the rather short-statured Catherine de Medici (1519-1589). At the age of 14, Catherine de Medici was engaged to the powerful Duke of Orleans, later the King of France. She was small (not quite five feet) relative to the Duke and hardly considered a beauty. She felt insecure in the arranged marriage knowing she would be the Queen of the French Court and in competition with the Duke’s favorite (and significantly taller) mistress, Diane de Poitiers. Looking for a way to dazzle the French nation and compensate for her perceived lack of aesthetic appeal, she donned heels two inches high that gave her a more towering physique and an alluring sway when she walked. Her heels were a wild success and soon high heels were associated with privilege. Mary Tudor, or “Bloody Mary,” another monarch seeking to appear larger than life, wore heels as high possible (McDowell 1989). By 1580, fashionable heels were popular for both sexes, and a person who had authority or wealth was often referred to as “well-heeled.”

King Louis XIV
In the early 1700s, France's King Louis XIV decreed that only nobility could wear heels that were colored red and that no one's heels could be higher than his own

In the early 1700s, France's King Louis XIV (The Sun King) would often wear intricate heels decorated with miniature battle scenes. Called “Louis heels,” they were often as tall as five inches. The king decreed that only nobility could wear heels that were colored red (les talons rogue) and that no one's heels could be higher than his own..

Subservient, my foot! :wink:
 
  • #47
I was hoping to keep this in our lifetime so it mattered (as in relevant) to us. High heeled shoes don't go back very far in history.
 
  • #48
Evo said:
I was hoping to keep this in our lifetime so it mattered (as in relevant) to us. High heeled shoes don't go back very far in history.
Pushing on in years, I may be, but Catherine de Medici was not one of my contemporaries. At least, I don't think she was ... :uhh:

It is possible to interpret the feminist movement "subservience" model of high heels as just a post-facto reaction against the prevailing standards. The same article that you quoted makes statements that are not consistent with your hypothesis. Please provide me with a reference to a peer-reviewed psychological study, in an accepted journal, that validates the hypothesis that wearing high heels makes women feel subservient.
 
  • #49
NemoReally said:
Pushing on in years, I may be, but Catherine de Medici was not one of my contemporaries. At least, I don't think she was ... :uhh:

It is possible to interpret the feminist movement "subservience" model of high heels as just a post-facto reaction against the prevailing standards. The same article that you quoted makes statements that are not consistent with your hypothesis. Please provide me with a reference to a peer-reviewed psychological study, in an accepted journal, that validates the hypothesis that wearing high heels makes women feel subservient.
LOL, :biggrin: you expect a peer reviewed scientific journal to have research on high heels?

Scientists don't do research on fashion, AFAIK. Peer reviewed sicentific journals are needed if you are referring to a scientific study, or something that should be.

I didn't state a hypothesis, I mentioned reading a fashion article, but I posted an article that backed up what I said I had read.
 
  • #50
Evo said:
LOL, :biggrin: you expect a peer reviewed scientific journal to have research on high heels?

Scientists don't do research on fashion, AFAIK.

Well, if you look at the PRL webpage you'll find that they've been proudly announcing their paper about the physics of Ponytails that won the IG nobel award, so you never know... :wink:

Also, on topic, something I haven't seen mentioned yet, is that high heels does change the proportions of their legs with respect to the rest of the body, and long legs is another thing that I guess is generally considered attractive.
 
  • #51
Evo said:
Scientists don't do research on fashion, AFAIK.
514Psk8%2BwRL._SL500_SY300_.jpg

A Stress Analysis of a Strapless Evening Gown.
 
  • #53
What we need is a peer reviewed article comparing the length of the 2nd finger to the 4th finger for high heel wearers to high heel non-wearers. That should provide some insight into the motivation to wear high heels.

While we have peer reviewed articles for high heels and peer reviewed articles for what the 2D/4D ratio means, no one has addressed how 2D/4D ratio affects the tendency to wear high heels.
 
Last edited:
  • #54
Evo said:
LOL, :biggrin: you expect a peer reviewed scientific journal to have research on high heels?

Social scientists study all kinds of weird stuff. High heels? Open toed shoes? Falsies? They're all fair game in the weird world of the social sciences.High heels aid in attracting a good mate.
E.O. Smith (1999). High Heels and evolution: natural selection, sexual selection, and high heels. Psychology, Evolution, and Gender, 1 (3), 245-277.
While it is unlikely that there is a gene for wearing high heels, the tendency to wear high heels under certain social conditions may be a manifestation of a larger pattern of behavior associated with mate attraction.
High heels help women get help from men.
M.B.Harris and G.Bails (1973). Altruism and sex roles. Psychological Reports, 32, 1002.
It appears that the likelihood of an altruistic response is indeed affected by sex-role stereotypes. Women wearing feminine attire [ruffled blouse, high heels, and curly hair] are more likely to be helped, particularly if they make a feminine request for help ["My shopping cart is stuck. Can you help me?"]
Related: Falsies also help women get help from men.
N.Guéguen (2007). Bust size and hitchhiking: a field study. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 105 (3), 1294-1298.
To test the effect of a woman's bust size on the rate of help offered, 1200 male and female French motorists were tested in a hitchhiking situation. A 20-yr.-old female confederate wore a bra which permitted variation in the size of cup to vary her breast size. She stood by the side of a road frequented by hitchhikers and held out her thumb to catch a ride. Increasing the bra-size of the female-hitchhiker was significantly associated with an increase in number of male drivers, but not female drivers, who stopped to offer a ride.
Or maybe women wear high heels because foot fetishes are safe sex? :uhh:
A.J.Giannini et al. (1998). Sexualization of the female foot as a response to sexually transmitted epidemics: a preliminary study. Psychological Reports, 83 (2), 491-498.
The authors reviewed historical literature and hypothesized a relationship between epidemics of sexually transmitted diseases and foot fetishism. They tested this hypothesis by quantifying foot-fetish depictions in the mass-circulation pornographic literature during a 30-yr. interval. An exponential increase was noted during the period of the current AIDS epidemic. The authors offer reasons for this possible relationship.
 
  • #56
D H said:
Social scientists study all kinds of weird stuff. High heels? Open toed shoes? Falsies? They're all fair game in the weird world of the social sciences.
For some reason, I never think about "social sciences". Thanks DH! :tongue2:
 
  • #57
Ibix said:
History of high heels according to the BBC.

Given title of this thread I'm surprised nobdy pounced on these from Ibix's link:

Biology Dr Helen Fischer, a biological anthropologist at Rutgers University, says that heels force women into a "natural courting pose" found amongst mammals, with an arched back and protruding buttocks

That sounds taboo to me.

But taboos are great producers of revenue.
Association Elizabeth Semmelhack believes that high heels began to be seen as erotic footwear when they came back into fashion in the late 19th Century - the nude models on French postcards were often wearing them
I'm not that old. My memory spans roughly Bettie Page to Dita Von Teese.I would observe we Americans have in recent decades perfected the art(?) of exaggeration.
Here's a sweet picture of ( i think) Lady Gaga in high heels:
ladygaga-1.jpg

courtesy these folks: http://popcrush.com/lady-gaga-craziest-heels-picture-picture-perfect/

You know, they just don't make nostalgia like they used to.
 
  • #58
I counter that exaggeration with my simple style Jimmy. I call it "Pants? Not at home."
 
  • #59
Not being male, I don't understand the attraction. But hey, whatever decreases μ for you.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOfMO2R7u44

 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #60
lisab said:
Not being male, I don't understand the attraction.
Being male, I don't understand the attraction.

That video is hideous.

http://omg.yahoo.com/photos/what-were-they-thinking-2013-slideshow/
The high healed shoes in the first image are just plain absurd.
:rolleyes: :uhh: Need I say more.
 
  • #61
Astronuc said:
http://omg.yahoo.com/photos/what-were-they-thinking-2013-slideshow/
The high healed shoes in the first image are just plain absurd.
:rolleyes: :uhh: Need I say more.
Not only are the shoes ugly, they're not the right size and her feet are REALLY ugly.
 
  • #62
You know, I read somewhere, perhaps on this very forum, that Women don't dress up for Men, they dress up for other Women.
 
  • #63
Astronuc said:
...

http://omg.yahoo.com/photos/what-were-they-thinking-2013-slideshow/
The high healed shoes in the first image are just plain absurd.
...




ChristinaRicciFeet_jpg_203202_zps856500c5.jpg



Au contraire, they're quite practical.
She could kill a cockroach in a corner.
 
  • #64
jim hardy said:
ChristinaRicciFeet_jpg_203202_zps856500c5.jpg



Au contraire, they're quite practical.
She could kill a cockroach in a corner.
And afterward, she can pick her teeth.
 
  • #65
lisab said:
Not being male, I don't understand the attraction. But hey, whatever decreases μ for you.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOfMO2R7u44



... Is it made for a horror/zombie movie?

Evo said:
And afterward, she can pick her teeth.

:rofl::rofl:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #66
He's a lumberjack, and he's OK; he wears "high heels, suspenders, and a bra"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mL7n5mEmXJo
 
  • #67
Astronuc said:
He's a lumberjack, and he's OK; he wears "high heels, suspenders, and a bra"
Oh god I remember when I first saw this Monty Python masterpiece I couldn't stop laughing until my stomach got knotted up and it started hurting. We need a Monty Python subforum!
 
  • #68
lisab said:
Not being male, I don't understand the attraction. But hey, whatever decreases μ for you.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOfMO2R7u44


Hence proving there is no idea that somebody, somewhere cannot extend beyond the bounds of rationality, practicality or stupidity. :cool:

Evo said:
LOL, :biggrin: you expect a peer reviewed scientific journal to have research on high heels?
Actually, I did. Apart from, as did you, noting that there is bound to have been the odd social "scientist" writing papers on such things, I wondered if somebody in the fashion industry had thought of seeing if science could provide an improved ROI. There's a lot of money involved and trimming a few euros off the budget by targeting design appeal parameters could be worth it.

Scientists don't do research on fashion, AFAIK. Peer reviewed sicentific journals are needed if you are referring to a scientific study, or something that should be.
Just to add to the other sources, I give you ...
Fashion Theory - "A fine addition to academic institutions with cultural studies programs; essential for those with special collections in fashion and costume.": http://www.bergpublishers.com/bergjournals/fashiontheory/tabid/524/default.aspx

http://www.bergpublishers.com/BergJournals/FashionPractice/tabid/3730/Default.aspx

Catwalk: The Journal of Fashion, Beauty, and Style, part of the Global Interdisciplinary Research Studies series, is an externally peer reviewed inter- and trans-disciplinary journal, published twice a year (with an optional 'special edition' some years). Catwalk publishes articles focused on the historical, social, cultural, psychological, political, business, media, technology, performance, representational, and artistic dimensions of fashion, beauty, and style. Our starting point is that fashion, beauty, and style lie at the very heart of persons, their sense of identity and individual expressiveness, and that all three influence the communities and world in which they live. Core themes explored by the journal include: the dressed and undressed body; adulated, marginal, and deviant bodies; beauty standards; fashion and style trends; and performance and self-fashioning through dress and body modification. Other topics Catwalk examines include the fashion-beauty-style industrial consumer complex; the social construction of glamour and icons; and the influence of race, ethnicity, nation, class, age, sexuality on discourses about, representations of, and the identity construction of fashion-beauty-style. We are interested in the roles of fashion, beauty, and style in the formation of identities, subcultures, communities, cities, and nations; and their influence in art, pop culture, celebrity culture, film, multi-media internet games, and the blogosphere. :http://www.interdisciplinarypress.net/index2.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=flypage.tpl&product_id=71&category_id=8&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=28 [Broken]

jim hardy said:
ChristinaRicciFeet_jpg_203202_zps856500c5.jpg

Au contraire, they're quite practical.
She could kill a cockroach in a corner.
I believe such a style has been popular throughout the ages for winkle-picking as well

Drakkith said:
You know, I read somewhere, perhaps on this very forum, that Women don't dress up for Men, they dress up for other Women.
I did a quick straw poll amongst the wives in my household. 100 % of them answered that women dress up for both.

I also did a quick survey amongst the wives and 12-year old daughters in my household. Both of them agreed that "subservient" is not a word that they would associate with the wearing of high heels. In fact, my daughter positively grinned with delight as she put on a pair of quite low heels and looked me in the eye (yes, she's quite tall for her age and she likes her ballet points for the same reason).
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #69
Evo said:
And afterward, she can pick her teeth.

:rofl:
 
  • #70
King Louis had invented high heels for himeself because he was so short.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XIV_of_France

he also looked Fabbbbbuuloooussss

and evolutionary wise, women do the peacocking not the males, which is different than majority of animals.
 
<h2>1. How do high-heeled shoes relate to evolution theory?</h2><p>High-heeled shoes are believed to have evolved from the elevated footwear worn by ancient civilizations, such as the Greeks and Romans. These shoes were primarily worn by the wealthy and served as a status symbol, indicating that the wearer did not have to perform manual labor. Over time, high-heeled shoes became associated with femininity and social status, and their evolution has been influenced by cultural and societal norms.</p><h2>2. Are high heels harmful to our feet from an evolutionary perspective?</h2><p>From an evolutionary perspective, high heels are not the most ideal footwear for our feet. The human foot has evolved to walk and run on natural surfaces, and high heels alter the natural alignment and function of our feet. They can lead to a variety of foot problems, such as bunions, hammertoes, and plantar fasciitis, due to the increased pressure and strain on certain areas of the foot.</p><h2>3. Do men also wear high heels in evolutionary history?</h2><p>Yes, men have also worn high heels throughout history. In fact, high heels were originally designed for men in the 16th century and were a symbol of masculinity and power. However, as fashion evolved, high heels became associated with femininity and were primarily worn by women. In recent years, there has been a resurgence of men wearing high heels as a form of self-expression and breaking gender norms.</p><h2>4. How have high heels evolved over time?</h2><p>High heels have evolved in terms of design, materials, and purpose. In ancient civilizations, they were primarily used to elevate the wearer and signify social status. In the 19th and 20th centuries, high heels became more of a fashion statement and were designed to be more aesthetically pleasing. Today, high heels come in a variety of styles and are worn for various occasions, from formal events to everyday wear.</p><h2>5. Are there any benefits to wearing high heels?</h2><p>While high heels may not be the most practical or comfortable footwear, they do offer some benefits. They can make the legs appear longer and more toned, and can improve posture by forcing the wearer to stand up straight. Additionally, high heels can boost confidence and make the wearer feel more attractive, which can have a positive impact on overall well-being.</p>

1. How do high-heeled shoes relate to evolution theory?

High-heeled shoes are believed to have evolved from the elevated footwear worn by ancient civilizations, such as the Greeks and Romans. These shoes were primarily worn by the wealthy and served as a status symbol, indicating that the wearer did not have to perform manual labor. Over time, high-heeled shoes became associated with femininity and social status, and their evolution has been influenced by cultural and societal norms.

2. Are high heels harmful to our feet from an evolutionary perspective?

From an evolutionary perspective, high heels are not the most ideal footwear for our feet. The human foot has evolved to walk and run on natural surfaces, and high heels alter the natural alignment and function of our feet. They can lead to a variety of foot problems, such as bunions, hammertoes, and plantar fasciitis, due to the increased pressure and strain on certain areas of the foot.

3. Do men also wear high heels in evolutionary history?

Yes, men have also worn high heels throughout history. In fact, high heels were originally designed for men in the 16th century and were a symbol of masculinity and power. However, as fashion evolved, high heels became associated with femininity and were primarily worn by women. In recent years, there has been a resurgence of men wearing high heels as a form of self-expression and breaking gender norms.

4. How have high heels evolved over time?

High heels have evolved in terms of design, materials, and purpose. In ancient civilizations, they were primarily used to elevate the wearer and signify social status. In the 19th and 20th centuries, high heels became more of a fashion statement and were designed to be more aesthetically pleasing. Today, high heels come in a variety of styles and are worn for various occasions, from formal events to everyday wear.

5. Are there any benefits to wearing high heels?

While high heels may not be the most practical or comfortable footwear, they do offer some benefits. They can make the legs appear longer and more toned, and can improve posture by forcing the wearer to stand up straight. Additionally, high heels can boost confidence and make the wearer feel more attractive, which can have a positive impact on overall well-being.

Similar threads

  • General Discussion
2
Replies
62
Views
11K
Replies
119
Views
20K
Back
Top